ALL the Indian tribes inhabiting the country about
the mouth of the Columbia, and for a hundred miles round, may be classed
in the following manner 1. Chinooks;-2. Clatsops;-3. Catlilamux; —4.
Wakicunis; —5. Wacalamus; —6. Cattleputles;7. Clatacanias;-8. Killimux;-9.
Moitnomas; and, 10. Chickelis; amounting
collectively to about 2,000 warriors. But they are a commercial rather
than a warlike people. Traffic in slaves and furs is their occupation.
They are said to be decreasing in numbers. All these tribes appear to be
descended from the same stock, live in rather friendly intercourse with,
and resemble one another in language, dress, and habits. Their origin,
like that of the other aborigines of the continent, is involved in fable,
although they pretend to be derived from the muskrat. Polygamy is common
among them, and a man may have as many wives as he pleases, but he is
bound to maintain his own children. In war, every man belonging to the
tribe is bound to follow his chief; and a coward is often punished with
death. All property is sacred in the eye of the law, nor can any one touch
it excepting the principal chief, or head Tye-yea, who is above the
law,
or rather he possesses an arbitrary power without any positive check, so
that if he conceive a liking to anything belonging to his subjects, be it
a wife or a daughter, he can take it without infringing the law; but he
must, nevertheless, pay for what he takes—and their laws assign a nominal
value to property of every kind.
The Chinooks
are crafty and intriguing and have probably learned the arts of cheating,
flattery, and dissimulation in the course of their traffic with the
coasting traders: for, on our first arrival among them, we found guns,
kettles, and various other articles of foreign manufacture in their
possession, and they were up to all the shifts of bargaining. Nor are they
less ingenious than inquisitive; the art they display in the making of
canoes, of pagoda, and of fishing-tackle, and other useful instruments,
deserves commendation. They show much skill in carved
work, which they finish with the most delicate polish.
The men are generally stout, muscular, and strong,
but not tall, and have nothing ferocious in their countenances. Their
dress invariably consists of a loose garment, made of the skin of the
wood-rat, neatly sewed together and painted, which they wrap round the
body like a blanket; nor does the hardy savage, though constantly rustling
through the woods, ever wear shirt, leggings, or shoes. The chief's robe
is made of sea-otter skin and other valuable furs. All classes wear the
cheapool, or hat, which is made of a tough strong kind of grass, and is of
so close a texture as to be water-proof: The crown is of a conic form,
terminating generally in a point at the top, and the rim so very broad as
to screen the shoulders from the rain. The cheapool is chequered or
diversified with the rude figures of different animals, particularly the
dog and deer, not painted, but ingeniously interwoven. Their war garments
are of two kinds, one is termed clemal, of elk-skin, dressed and worked to
the thickness of nearly half an inch, and arrow-proof. The clemal nearly
covers the whole body, with an opening left on the right side to allow the
arm free action in combat. The other is a kind of vest, made of small
round sticks of the size and shape of arrows, twelve inches long: they are
laid side to side, and then sewed together, and fixed on the body like a
waist coat. This is arrow-proof also. They carry a circular shield, about
eighteen inches in diameter, which is likewise made of the elk-skin; but
in addition to its thickness it is hardened by fire and painted, and is
not only arrow-proof, but proof against the knife and the tomahawk also.
Their implements of warfare are guns, bows and arrows, knife, bludgeon,
and tomahawk, all of which they use with great dexterity. A Chinooke
Indian armed cap-à-pie is a most unsightly and hideous being.
When not employed either in war or hunting, the men
generally spend their time in gambling. The chief game, chal-e-chal, at
which they stake their most valuable property, is played by six persons,
with ten circular palettes of polished wood, in size and shape resembling
dollars. A mat three feet broad and six feet long is spread on the ground,
and the articles at stake laid at one end, then the parties seat
themselves, three on each side of the mat, facing one another; this done,
one of the players takes up the ten palettes, shuffling and shifting them
in his hands, when at a signal given he separates them in his two fists,
and throws them out on the mat towards his opponent, and according as the
palettes roll, slide, or lie on the mat when thrown, the party wins or
loses. This he does three times successively. In this manner each tries
his skill in turn, till one of the parties wins. Whole days and nights are
spent in this game without ceasing, and the Indians seldom grumble or
repine even should they lose all that they possess. During the game the
players keep chanting a loud and sonorous tune, accompanying the different
gestures of the body just as the voyageurs keep time to the paddle.
Having noticed some of the characteristic manners and
customs of the men, I shall now indulge the reader's curiosity with a few
remarks on the habits and accomplishments of the fair sex. The women are
generally of the middle size, but very stout and flabby, with short necks
and shapeless limbs; yet they are well-featured, with something of a smile
on the countenance, fair complexion, light hair, and prominent eyes. In
addition to the rat-garment used by the men, the women wear a kind of
fringed petticoat' suspended from the waist down to the knees, made of the
inner rind of the cedar bark, and twisted into threads, which hang loose
like a weaver's thrums, and keep flapping and twisting about with every
motion of the body, giving them a waddle or duck gait. This garment might
deserve praise for its simplicity, or rather for its oddity, but it does
not screen nature 'from the prying eye; yet it is remarkably convenient on
many occasions.. In a calm the sails lie close to the mast, metaphorically
speaking, but when the wind blows the bare poles are seen.
Instead of the cedar petticoat, the women of some
tribes prefer a breech cloth, similar to the pow of the, Owhyhee females,
and is nothing more than a piece of dressed deer-skin, six inches broad
and four feet long, which, after passing between the thighs, is tied round
the waist. Words can hardly express the disgusting unsightliness of this
singular female dress. The women, when not employed in their domestic
labour, are generally occupied in curing fish, collecting roots, and
making mats and baskets; the latter, of various sizes and different
shapes, are made of the roots of certain shrubs, which are flexible and
strong, and they are capable of containing any liquid. In this branch of
industry they excel among Indian tribes. The neatness and good taste
displayed in the Chinooke baskets are peculiar to that article, which is
eagerly sought after as a curiosity.
The women
here are not generally subject to that drudgery common among most other
Indian tribes. Slaves do all the laborious work; and a Chinooke matron is
constantly attended by two, three, or more slaves, who are on all
occasions obsequious to her will. In trade and barter the women are as
actively employed as the men, and it is as common to see the wife,
followed by a train of slaves, trading at the factory, as her husband.
Slaves are the fruits of war and of trade among the tribes along the
seacoast far to the north, and are regularly bought and sold in the same
manner as any other article of property; but I never knew a single
instance of a Chinooke, or one of the neighbouring tribes, ever selling
his wife, or daughter, or any other member of his family.
Chastity is not considered a virtue by the Chinooke
women, and their amorous propensities know no bound& All classes, from the
highest to the lowest, indulge in coarse sensuality and shameless
profligacy. Even the chief would boast of obtaining a paltry toy or trifle
in return for the prostitution of his virgin daughter.
The females are excessively fond of singing and
adorning their persons with the fantastic trinkets peculiar to savages;
and on these occasions the slaves are generally rigged out the best, in
order to attract attention and procure admirers. All classes marry very
young; and every woman, whether free born or a slave, is purchased by her
husband.
Children are suckled at the breast
till their second or third year, and the mother, in consequence, becomes
an old hag at the age of thirty-five.
The
women have also their own amusements. Their chief game, called omintook,
is played by two only, with four beaver teeth, curiously marked and
numbered on one side, which they throw like dice. The two women being
seated on the ground, face to face, like the men at chal-e-chal,. one of
them takes up the teeth, keeps shaking them in her hands for some time,
then throws them down on the mat, counts the numbers uppermost, and
repeating the sum thrice, hands the teeth over to the other party, who
proceeds in like manner. The highest number wins. At this game, trinkets
of various descriptions and value are staked. On a fine day, it is amusing
to see a whole camp or village, both men and women, here and there in
numerous little bands, gambling, jeering, and laughing at one another,
while groups of children keep in constant motion, either, in the water or
practising the bow and arrow, and even the aged take a lively interest in
what is passing, and there appears a degree of happiness among them, which
civilized men, wearied with care and anxious pursuits, perhaps seldom
enjoy.
These people live by hunting and
fishing; but the greater part of their food is derived from the waters.
The Columbia salmon, of which there are two species, are perhaps as fine
as any in the world, and are caught in the utmost abundance during the
summer season: so that, were a foreign market to present itself; the
natives alone might furnish 1,000 tons annually. The largest caught in my
time weighed forty-seven pounds. Sturgeon also are very abundant, and of
uncommon size, yet tender and well flavoured, many of them weighing
upwards of 700 pounds, and one caught and brought to us, measured 13 feet
9 inches in length, and weighed 1,130 pounds. There is a small fish
resembling the smelt or herring, known by the name of ulichan, which
enters the river in immense shoals, in the spring of the year. The
ulichans are generally an article of trade with the distant tribes, as
they are caught only at the entrance of large rivers. To prepare them for
a distant market, they are laid side to side, head and tail alternately,
and then a thread run through both extremities links them together, in
which state they are dried, smoked, and sold by the fathom, hence they
have obtained the name of fathom-fish. Roots and berries likewise form no
inconsiderable portion of the native's food. Strawberries are ripe in
January. The wapatoe, a perennial root, of the size, shape, and taste of
the common potato, is a favourite article of food at all times of the
year. This esculent is highly esteemed by the whites; many other roots and
berries are to be had, all of which grow spontaneously in the low marshy
ground. Fish, roots, and berries, can therefore be had in perfection, all
along the coast, every month in the year. But not a fish of any kind is
taken out of the ocean.
The circulating medium
in use among these people is a small white shell called higua, about two
inches long, of a convex form, and hollow in the heart, resembling in
appearance the small end of a smoking pipe. The higua is thin, light, and
durable, and may be found of all lengths, between three inches down to
one-fourth of an inch, and increases or decreases in value according to
the number required to make a fathom, by which measure they are invariably
sold. Thirty to a fathom are held equal in value to three fathoms of
forty, to four of fifty, and so on. So high are the higua prized, that I
have seen six of 2½ inches long refused for a new gun. But of late, since
the whites came among them, the beaver skin called enna, has been added to
the currency; so that, by these two articles, which form the medium of
trade, or property is valued, and all exchange fixed and determined. An
Indian, in buying an article, iu variably asks the question, Queentshich
higua? or, Queentshich enna? That is, how many higna? or, how many beaver
skins is it?
All Indians are more or less
superstitious, and we need scarcely be surprised at that trait in their
cla racter, when even civilized men respect so many prejudices. Every
great chief has one or more pagoda or wooden deities in his house, to
which, in all great councils of peace or war he presents the solemn pipe,
and this is the only religious temple known among them.
They acknowledge a good and a bad spirit, the former
named Econé, the latter Ecutoch. The Etaminuas, or priests, are supposed
to possess a secret power of conversing with the Econ, and of destroying
the influence of the Ecutoch: they are employed in all eases of sickness
to intercede for the dying, that these may have a safe passage to the land
of departed spirits. Besides the Etaminua, there is another class called
Keelallee, or doctors, and it is usual for women, as well as men, to
assume the character of a Keelalle, whose office it is to administer
medicine and cure diseases. But the antic gestures, rude and absurd
ceremonies gone through by them in visiting the sick, are equally useless
and ridiculous, humming, howling, singing, and rattling of sticks, as if
miracles were to be performed by mere noise; yet if we forget these
useless gesticulations, which may be called the ornamental part, we must
allow them to be a serviceable and skilful class of people. Their
knowledge of roots and herbs enables them to meet the most difficult
cases, and to perform cures, particularly in all external complaints.
The property of a deceased person is generally
destroyed, and the near relations cut their hair, disfigure and lacerate
their bodies; nor is this all, at the funeral ceremony strangers are here,
as among some oriental nations, paid to join in the lamentation. All,
excepting slaves, are laid in canoes or wooden sepulchres, and conveyed to
some consecrated rock or thicket assigned for the dead; but slaves are
otherwise disposed of; that is, if he or she dies in summer, the body is
carelessly buried; but if in winter, a stone is tied about the neck, and
the body thrown into the river, and none but slaves ever touch a slave
after death.
When the salmon make their first
appearance in the river, they are never allowed to be cut crosswise, nor
boiled, but roasted; nor are they allowed to be sold without the heart
being first taken out, nor to be kept over night; but must be all consumed
or eaten the day they are taken out of the water; all these rules are
observed for about ten days. These superstitious customs perplexed us at
first not a little, because they absolutely refused to sell us any unless
we complied with their notions, which of course we consented to do. All
the natives along the coast navigate in canoes, and so expert are they
that the stormiest weather or roughest water never prevents them from
cruising on their favourite element. The Chinook and other war canoes are
made like the Birinan barge, out of a solid tree, and are from forty to
fifty feet long, with a human face or a white-headed eagle, as large as
life, carved on the prow, and raised high in front.
If we may judge from appearances, these people are
subject to but few diseases. Consumption and the venereal disease are the
complaints most common amongst them; from their knowledge in simples, they
generally, succeed in curing the latter even in its worst stages.
In winter they live in villages, but in summer rove
about from place to place. Their houses are oblong, and built of broad,
split cedar-planks, something in the European style, and covered with the
bark of the same tree. They are sufficiently large and commodious to
contain all the members of a numerous family, slaves included. At the top
or ridge pole, an opening gives free passage to the smoke; they have one
or more, according to the number of families in each. But I never saw more
than four fires, or above eighty persons—slaves and all—in the largest
house.
Towards the spring of the year, or as
soon as the rainy season is over, all the Indians on the coast break up
their winter quarters, and form large square sheds, for the purpose of
drying and curing their fish, roots, and berries. Within this huge
enclosure they then live in hordes, like so many cattle in a fold; but
these sheds are only, for temporary purposes; and it must have been on
some such occasion that Meares found Wickananish in his "household of 800
persons." They, migrate towards the interior sometimes for months
together; war and traffic in slaves often call them to a distance; and
this may account for the absence of inhabitants about Port Discovery and
Desolation Sound when Vancouver was there. But another cause, and perhaps
the best that can be assigned, for their abandoning their winter domicilea
as soon as the warm weather sets in, is the immense swarms of fleas that
breed in them during that season. You might as well encounter a bee-hive,
as approach one of these deserted villages.
Among other fantastic
usages, many of the tribes on the coast of the Pacific, and particularly
those about Columbia, flatten the heads of their children. No sooner,
therefore, is a child born, whether male or female, than its head is put
into a press, or mould of boards, in order to flatten it. From the
eyebrows, the head of a Chinook inclines backward to the crown; the back
part inclining forward, but in a lees degree. There is thus a ridge raised
from ear to ear, giving the head the form of a wedge; and the more acute
the angle, the greater the beauty. The flatness of the head is considered
the distinguishing mark of being free born. All slaves are forbidden to
bear this aristocratic distinction. Yet I have seen one or two instances
to the contrary, where a favourite slave was permitted to flatten the head
of a first-born child. No such custom is practised in any part of the
interior. But all nations, civilized as well as savage, have their
peculiar prejudices. The law of the land compels a South-Sea Islander to
pull out a tooth; a northern Indian cuts a joint of his finger; national
usage obliges a Chinese lady to deform her feet; an English lady, under
the influence of fashion, compresses her waist; while a Chinook lady
deforms her head. But Solomon hath said, "That which is crooked cannot be
made straight."
As tracts suitable for
agricultural purposes, may be mentioned several fertile and rich flats on
the Columbia, although the country generally presents but a rocky, light,
and sandy soil. On the south side, the river is joined, about eighty miles
above Astoria, by the Wallamitte, a fine clear stream, 300 miles long,
which, with its tributary rivulets, fertilizes one of the finest valleys
west of the Rocky Mountains. The Wallamitte was always called by the
whites, "I the garden of the Columbia." For forty miles the river is
navigable for boats of the largest size, to the falls, but there it is
barred across by a ledge of rocks, over which the whole body of water
descends —a height of 30 feet—in one smooth green sheet. The climate of
this valley is salubrious and dry, differing materially from that of the
sew-coast; and the heat is sufficiently intense to ripen every kind of
grain in a short time.
Descending from the
Wallamitte to Puget's Sound, north of the Columbia, where there is a large
and convenient sea-port, or harbour, we find here a tract ranking next,
perhaps, in an agricultural point of view. The plain is well watered by
several fine rivers, and is far more extensive than the valley of the
Wallamitte, nor is the soil much inferior; but there is a vast difference
in the climate; rain falls near the coast almost incessantly from the
beginning of November till April, and the country in other respects is
gloomy and forbidding.
But, however inviting
may be the soil, the remote distance and savage aspect of the boundless
wilderness along the Pacific seem to defer the colonization of such a
region to a period far beyond the present generation; and yet, if we
consider the rapid progress of civilization in other new and equally
remote countries, we might still indulge the hope of seeing this, at no
distant time, one of the most flourishing countries on the globe.
The language spoken by these people is guttural, very
difficult for a foreigner to learn, and equally hard to pronounce. To
speak the Chinook dialect, you must be a Chinook.